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  • Text to MP3?

    Hi guys i was wondering if there was any quick and simple yet effective software that will allow we to quickly change text into an audio file. What i want to do is have my MP3 player read out lecture notes to me while im at work. I know i can simply use a reading program to read the text, then a wav program to capture the sound file. Then using a MP3 encoder program to convery into MP3 (or WMA) format. There are too many steps here to make the process quick and enjoyable.

    Any help anyone? cheers

    P.s. I forgot to mention, ive used google but i cant find any free programs.

  • #2
    I saw a box that will read the words when you put a book under it, guess it is for the blind. Not cheap, and be prepared for really bad sounds that are supposed to be words.

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    • #3
      all of my notes are pretyped into ms word so all i need is a text to mp3 converter

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      • #4
        Perhaps you could pipe the output of the Festival Speech Synthesis System into an MP3 encoder (e.g., LAME).

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        • #5
          i started using this approach to studying a year ago. though it takes time, i find it to offer more success to me than just reading.

          i have always done the long process you described. i'll keep my eyes peeled for a simpler program.

          ps > i find the robotic voice of the program i use to be more tolerable than some of my professors.

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          • #6
            I don't know how handy you are, but in essence this is exactly what my TCP/IP embedded device entry did this year. I was feeding ASCII from a POST on an webpage, and had a chip that spoke the text out-loud. The voice doesn't sound "Hawking-esque", but sounded OK. If you have the Word files, I don't see this as much of a problem...I believe (but I don't use) XP has text to speech built right in...

            I would just take the ASCII stream, feed it to a microcontroller, and have that feed a text-to-speech IC, just like I did in my device- but this will take design , building and coding. (My idea of a good time.)

            LosT

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            • #7
              You can try using something i experimented with in high school for or BPA presentations. Worked out pretty well:

              www.bytecool.com/coolspch.htm

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              • #8
                ms agent uses a text to speech deal...

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                • #9
                  Try this handy little app... free trial and only $20.00 if you like.

                  Text-to-Speech Maker. It'll read to WAV, MP3, or VOX files for listening to later with your portable MP3 player. Go to http://www.xrlly.com/text-to-speech.htm and enjoy!

                  -Spider.

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